Let $a>0$, and for any time point $t\in [0,1]$, define $\sigma_t^2:= t^2 + (1-t)^2$. Next, we define the following ODE: $$ \frac{d X_t}{dt} = \frac{2t-1}{\sigma_t^2} X_t + \frac{a(1-t)}{\sigma_t^2} \tanh\left(\frac{a t X_t }{\sigma_t^2}\right) \quad \text{for $t \in [0,1]$}, $$ where $\tanh(u) = \frac{1 - e^{-2u}}{1+ e^{-2u}}$. Assume that initially $X_0$ is strictly positive, i.e., $X_0>\delta$ for some $\delta>0$. I conjecture that $X_t>0$ for all $t\in [0,1]$ and I also want prove this. For now, I simulated the ODE and got the following results: .
For now, this somewhat validates my claim. Note that the velocity at $t =0$ is $(-\delta)$ which means that initially, the particle would start going in the negative direction. Still, eventually it should it should start going the other way. Is there any way to formalize this? Thank you for any help.
Edit: I have posted a solution below.